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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Alternative belief systems > Syncretist & eclectic religions & belief systems
Given his energetic involvement in practical initiatives and
extensive lecturing, Rudolf Steiner had little time to write books.
Of those he did write - belonging almost entirely to the earlier
years of his work - four titles form an indispensable introduction
to his later teaching: Knowledge of the Higher Worlds, Occult
Science, The Philosophy of Freedom and Theosophy. Theosophy focuses
on a psychology based not on the usual duality of body and mind,
but on the more ancient division of body, soul and spirit. Steiner
describes in detail the functions and organs of these three aspects
of the human being, and the objective realms to which they belong.
Just as the body derives from and belongs to the material world, so
do the human soul and spirit belong to their own specific realms.
These are the dimensions through which all human beings travel in
the life after death, and in which - after passing the 'midnight
hour' - we prepare to seek our destiny, or karma, in a new life.
Theosophy features one of the most comprehensive and condensed of
all Steiner's accounts of these realms, and of the experiences
which our immortal being undergoes in passing through them. The
book ends with a chapter on the modern 'path of knowledge', in
which Steiner describes the exercises through which every person
may develop the latent powers of perception which are necessary for
a knowledge of metaphysical worlds.
In ancient times, people's experience of the divine was imbued with
the feminine archetype. The world of spirit was seen to be
populated by goddesses, and women were honoured as priestesses and
guardians of sacred rites. The later Greek and Roman civilizations,
in contrast, were characterized by the principle of patriarchy,
which still dominates our culture - despite the political and
social emancipation of women in the West. This unique study of the
feminine archetype throws new light on the spiritual significance
and meaning of the feminine principle today, as well as its task
and destiny in the future. Beginning with Eve in tradition and
legend, the authors provide insightful commentaries on the Queen of
Sheba, the image of the Virgin in esoteric Christianity,
Isis-Sophia and the Great Mother, the birth of art from the primal
source of the feminine, and the importance of women in modern
esotericism. Through a study of the esoteric background to human
and earth evolution, Sease and Schmidt-Brabant arrive at clear and
accessible perspectives that could transform human life, and in
particular family culture, in our time.
With great empathy, delicacy, and directness, Peter Selg recounts,
in three lectures, the moving story of Ita Wegman and her
relationship with Rudolf Steiner in the context of the development
of anthroposophic medicine and the formation of the Medical Section
of the School for Spiritual Science. Steiner had suffered patiently
until the right person-Ita Wegman-arrived to guide spiritual
science's healing mission into the medical fi eld. In the fall of
1920, Ita Wegman founded a medical clinic in Arlesheim. From then
on, she and Rudolf Steiner worked together, both medically and
spiritually, gradually unveiling a karmic working relationship
unique in Steiner's life. Thus the stage is set. The second lecture
focuses on anthroposophic curative education: ..". the social
center, the heart even, of Ita Wegman's 'Medical Section.' To make
a commitment to children with severe obstacles in their
incarnation, out of spiritual insight into the human being and the
wider karmic context, and to make this commitment as a group of
people working out of a Christian-religious impulse-this was for
Ita Wegman the true anthroposophic medicine." Dr. Selg then
describes Dr. Wegman's heroic eff orts to create a true community
of physicians working anthroposophically out of Rudolf Steiner's
indications and in the spirit of Christ; how she looked after her
colleagues, always seeking to wake them up "to the destiny of their
own being." As well, she sought to resist all that was happening in
Nazi Germany, never forgetting Rudolf Steiner's warning: "In the
future the Anthroposophical Society will be faced with the crucial
decision of whether responsibilities will be met or not..." And
here exactly lies the heart of this wonderful book: the inner
struggle to make love responsible.
During the brief window between the two World Wars, the Rev. Prof.
Hermann Beckh led research at The Christian Community Seminary in
Stuttgart. In those precious years he published on music, the
gospels and the ancient Mysteries. By 1930, in his Contributions to
the Priests' Newsletter, he had produced the most far-reaching
account of the cosmic order ever written. The typescript of this
great work was destined to gather dust in the Berlin Archiv,
however, until it was discovered in recent years. Published here
for the first time, it is the crowning masterpiece to Beckh's
Collected Works. The translated and annotated text is accompanied
by Rudolf Frieling's in-depth application of Beckh's principles of
the cosmic starry order to the Creed of The Christian Community,
and by a number of appreciations and relevant book reviews. Through
ever-deepening meditation guided by Rudolf Steiner, and his vast
knowledge of Tibetan, Sanskrit, Pali and Avestan sacred texts -
scarcely to be equalled in Europe at the time - Beckh came to the
first-hand realization that human and cosmic life was ordered. He
perceived directly that this cosmic order was: good, as originating
from the World-Will; true, as from World-Thinking; and beautiful,
as from World-Feeling. All three could be personally experienced in
disciplined consciousness that could enter dream, sleep and
pre-natal life. This, then, was Beckh's method and inspiration, as
shown in this extraordinary work.
Underlying Sergei O. Prokofieff's life's work was a fundamental
research-theme to which he returned to repeatedly: the
individuality of Rudolf Steiner as manifested through his past
incarnations on Earth. Beginning in 1982, inspired by a visit to an
exhibition on The Epic of Gilgamesh, Prokofieff planned a
full-scale spiritual biography with the intention of finding an
answer to the question: Who is Rudolf Steiner? In a sequence of
five past incarnations - as indicated by Steiner himself - and
culminating in the life of Rudolf Steiner, Prokofieff searched for
the inner thread between the six stages of this great,
all-encompassing life. His intention was to find not only the outer
connections in this sequence but also the deeper, more esoteric
stream that offers the key to the unique significance of this
individuality. In 1984, Prokofieff began to write the first chapter
about Rudolf Steiner's incarnation as Enkidu in Sumer. Sadly, many
obstacles in his path were to prevent him finalising the project.
However, the author returned to the book in his final months,
preparing a Preface that outlines its conception together with a
summary chapter on Rudolf Steiner's evolutionary journey. This
precious 'fragment' of a biography features valuable additional
material, including: a full introduction to the relationship of the
anthroposophical movement to other occult streams of esoteric
Christianity and their Masters; a detailed spiritual-scientific
interpretation of the Epic of Gilgamesh that establishes Rudolf
Steiner's connection with the being of Jesus of Nazareth, and an
exploration of Steiner's relationship to the Nathan soul, the Luke
Jesus child. Serious students of anthroposophy will welcome these
final writings from the pen of one of Rudolf Steiner's most
faithful and insightful disciples.
The point, line, plane and solid objects represent the first three
dimensions, but a kind of reversal of space is involved in the
ascent to a fourth dimension. Steiner leads us to the brink of this
new perspective-as nearly as it can be done with words, diagrams,
analogies, and examples of many kinds. In doing so, he continues
his lifelong project of demonstrating that our objective, everyday
thinking is the lowest rung of a ladder that reaches up to
literally infinite heights. The talks in this series and the
selections from the question-and-answer sessions on many
mathematical topics over the years are translated into English for
the first time in THE FOURTH DIMENSION. They bring us to
tantalizing new horizons of awareness where Steiner hoped to lead
his listeners: Topics include: * The relationship between geometric
studies and developing direct perception of spiritual realities *
How to construct a fourth-dimensional hypercube * The six
dimensions of the self-aware human being * Problems with the theory
of relativity * The Trinity and angelic hierarchies and their
relationship to physical space * The dimensional aspect of the
spiritual being encountered by Moses on Mt. Sinai
During the refounding of the Anthroposophical Society as the
General Anthroposophical Society at Christmas 1923/24, Rudolf
Steiner also reconstituted, as the School of Spiritual Science, the
Esoteric School he had led in three classes from 1904 to 1914, at
the same time extending its scope by adding artistic and scientific
Sections. However, owing to his illness and later death in March
1925, he was only able to make a beginning by establishing the
First Class and the Sections. The actual step from the Esoteric
School to the School of Spiritual Science was nevertheless an
exceptional one. The Esoteric School from Helena Blavatsky's time
had been secret. Its existence was known only to those personally
invited to participate. In contrast, the existence of the School of
Spiritual Science was stated openly in the public statutes of the
General Anthroposophical Society. From the Christmas Conference
onwards, Rudolf Steiner worked within this publicly acknowledged
framework. The Class Lessons comprise a complete spiritual course
of nineteen fundamental lessons given between February and August
1924, several lessons given at other locations, and seven further
lessons from September 1924 which take up the themes of the first
part of the nineteen lessons in a modified form. This authentic,
accurate and high-quality bilingual edition - with English and
German texts printed side by side - is published in conjunction
with the School of Spiritual Science at the Goetheanum. A compact
four-volume clothbound set, it features plates with Rudolf
Steiner's handwritten notes of the mantras and reproductions of his
original colour blackboard drawings. The translations of the
mantric verses have been reworked by a committed group of
translators, linguists and editors, expressing subtleties of
meaning, grammatical accuracy and poetic style whilst retaining the
original sound and metre of the German mantric forms. Three
versions of the existing English translations are also included.
'Concern for the world today provides the impetus to ask of
ourselves a profound question... how can our way of knowing, the
very style of our thinking which informs our research and our
teaching, come to express care, to reveal itself to be a deed and
duty of care?' Basing this practical study on the human quality of
care for the world around us, Nigel Hoffmann takes us to a
threshold beyond which lies a true science of living form. Care, he
says, springs from the whole human being - the thinking, heart and
will - and is implicit in the scientific method of conscious inner
participation in nature that derives from the work of the poet and
scientist Goethe. The Goethean approach - a living form that unites
science and art - is not an alternative to contemporary science but
complements it. Artistic practice, says Hoffmann, is a guide across
the threshold and into the sphere of the living whole. But artistic
sensibility can be raised to a higher possibility of itself,
allowing us to discover the faculties of cognitive feeling and
cognitive will. The author calls for a grounding in Goethean
science for all students as a preliminary to their specialist and
professional studies. He introduces us to the concept of the
metamorphosis of the university - from the doctoral ideal to the
ideal of the whole human being - and concludes with a case study of
the economic sphere and capital using Goethean methodology. This
profound book indicates a transformative path for human culture and
civilization in the 21st century. NIGEL HOFFMANN PhD has for
eighteen years been a high school teacher, in Australian and Swiss
Rudolf Steiner schools. He is the author of Goethe's Science of
Living Form: The Artistic Stages (Adonis Press) and is a director
of the Education for Social Renewal Foundation.
These two lecture courses, given just after the beginning of World
War I, stand as a kind of unexpected gift. A few months later, once
the war became a reality, the possibilities for esoteric work would
change and it would become more difficult to do spiritual research.
But in the short interval before the true horror of the conflict
unfolded, Rudolf Steiner was able to give these lectures, which lay
out in the clearest fashion the path of anthroposophic meditation,
and its assumptions, language, and consequences.
Based on direct communications with his eight spirit guides, Dr Bob
Woodward confirms that we have all lived in spirit worlds before
our birth - and that we will enter these same realms again after
our material deaths. In a very real sense, these higher spirit
worlds are actually our true home, he says, rather than our present
physical existence, which is only a temporary abode. In
consultation with his spirit guides - including a Tibetan Lama, a
Jewish Rabbi, a Native American and his personal guardian angel -
Bob Woodward gives a detailed survey of our lives in spirit worlds
before birth and after death, our relationships there with friends,
family and even pets, and our connections with both good and evil
spiritual beings. He also gives a commentary on a range of subjects
such as reincarnation and climate change. In a final extensive and
moving interview, Woodward finds and speaks with the soul of his
deceased father, who offers enlightening glimpses of life after
death. Whilst the author's knowledge is grounded in decades of
study of the work of Rudolf Steiner - with which he compares the
results of his own extrasensory perceptions - Knowledge of Spirit
Worlds is not intended as a dry philosophical study. Rather, it has
a warm, experiential quality - based as it is on personal
interaction with spirit entities - and emphasizes the love that
connects all worlds and beings together.
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